首页
登录
职称英语
Despite the clear-cut technological advantages, the railroad didn’t become t
Despite the clear-cut technological advantages, the railroad didn’t become t
游客
2024-11-25
1
管理
问题
Despite the clear-cut technological advantages, the railroad didn’t become the primary means of transportation for nearly 20 years after the first pioneering American railroads were introduced in the early 1830s. Besides the stiff competition of water transport, an important hindrance to railroad development was public antipathy, which had its roots in ignorance, conservatism, and vested interest. People thought that speeds of 20 to 30 miles per hour would be physically harmful to passengers. Many honestly believed that the railroad would prove to be impractical and uneconomical and would not provide service as dependable as that of the waterways.
Unsurprisingly, the most vigorous opposition to railroads came from groups whose economic interests suffered from the competition of the new industry. Millions of dollars had been spent on canals, rivers, highways, and plank roads, and thousands of people depended on these transportation enterprises for their livelihood. Tavern keepers feared their businesses would be ruined, and farmers envisioned the market for hay and grain disappearing as the "iron horse" replaced the flesh-and-blood animal that drew canal boats and pulled wagons. Competitive interests joined to embarrass and hinder the railroads, causing several states to limit traffic on them to passengers and their baggage or to freight hauled only during the months when canal operations ceased. One railroad company in Ohio was required to pay for any loss in canal traffic attributed to railroad competition. Other railroads were ordered to pay a tonnage tax to support the operation of canals.
These sentiments, however amusing today, were seriously espoused by national leaders, as seen in a 1829 letter from Martin Van Buren, then governor of New York, to President Andrew Jackson.
Despite the opposition of those who feared the railroads, construction went on. In sections of the country where canals could not be built, the railroad offered a means of cheap transportation for all kinds of commodities. In contrast to the municipality that wished to exclude the railroad, many cities and towns, as well as their state governments, did much to encourage railroad construction. And the federal government provided tariff exemptions on railroad iron.
By 1840,railroad mileage in the United States was within 1,000 miles of the combined lengths of all canals, the volume of goods carried by water still exceeded that transported by rail. After the depression of the early 1840s, rail investments continued, mostly government assisted, and by 1850,the country had 9,000 miles of railroads, and the railroad’s superiority was clear.
With the more than 20,000 miles of rails added to the transportation system between 1850 and 1860,total trackage surpassed 30,000 at the end of the decade, and the volume of freight traffic equaled that of canals. All the states east of the Mississippi were connected during this decade. The eastern seaboard was linked with the Mississippi River system, and the Gulf and South Atlantic states could interchange traffic with the Great Lakes. Growing trunk lines like the Erie, the Pennsylvania, and the Baltimore and Ohio completed construction of projects that had been started in the 1840s,and combinations of short lines provided new through routes. By the beginning of the Civil War, the eastern framework of the present rail-transportation system had been erected, and it was possible to travel by rail the entire distance from New York to Chicago to Memphis and back to New York.
Many modifications and improvements occurred, and total factor productivity in railroads more than doubled in the two decades before the Civil War. Technological advances were reflected in the fact that the average traction force of locomotives more than doubled in these two decades. Freight car sizes also increased, with eight-wheel cars being common by 1859. Most of the productivity rise, however, resulted from increased utilization of existing facilities. The stock of capital—and other inputs—grew, but output grew much faster as the initial input became more fully utilized. [br] The American farmers worried that______.
选项
A、their horses would be replaced by the "iron horse"
B、there would be no market for their crops
C、there would be no market for their livestock
D、they would benefit less from railroads than from waterways
答案
B
解析
细节题第二段第三句指出,客栈老板害怕生意受损,农民预料到由“铁马”代替拖动运河船只和驾车的有着血肉之躯的活马以后,出售干草与谷物的市场将不复存在。由此可见,农民担心如果火车替代了马车、牛车等,就没有人购买他们的农作物喂牲畜了,故[B]为答案。[A]是造成农作物没有市场的原因,不是农民最直接关心的问题,故排除;[C]属于张冠李戴,[D]的范围过大,故均排除。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3860214.html
相关试题推荐
Itisreportedthatacademicdishonestyhasbecomeepidemicatalllevelsof
FoodsecurityhasbecomeanincreasinglyurgentprobleminChina.Wehavehe
Itisreportedthatacademicdishonestyhasbecomeendemicinalllevelsof
Whatmakessciencefictionbecometomorrow’sreality?[originaltext]Thehigh
TheadvantagesofhotelsareallofthefollowingEXCEPTthatthey______.[br]
TheadvantagesofhotelsareallofthefollowingEXCEPTthatthey______.[br]
TheadvantagesofhotelsareallofthefollowingEXCEPTthatthey______.[origi
AccordingtoNOAA,howmanystormscouldbecomehurricanes?[br][originaltext]
Despitetheclear-cuttechnologicaladvantages,therailroaddidn’tbecomet
Despitetheclear-cuttechnologicaladvantages,therailroaddidn’tbecomet
随机试题
"Agoodnewspaperisanationtalkingtoitself,"musedArthurMillerin196
Forme,scientificknowledgeisdividedintomathematicalsciences,natural
Whatmessagedoesthespeakertrytoconveyinthispassage?[br][originaltext
以下关于理财师的职业特征阐述正确的是( )。A.理财师提供理财规划,要考虑短期
(2018年真题)关于投资者风险评估,表述错误的是()A.投资者应当以书面
货币经纪公司最早起源于()。A.美国 B.英国 C.中国 D.意大利
企业抵押经营贷款主要适用人群不包括()。A.中小业主 B.个体经营者 C
传染病流行过程必须具备的三个基本环节是A.病原体、环境、易感人群 B.病原体、
某市统计局在针对噪音扰民的一次调查中,当问及受访市民对哪一类噪音反感时,选择社区
对投资者而言,优先股票是一种比较安全的投资对象,这是因为其()。A:在公司财产清
最新回复
(
0
)